I’m sorry that I haven’t been
keeping in touch with you recently but the problem is that I don’t
have a laptop I can write my blogs up on anymore as Anthony got his
bag stolen in Mzuzu which contained the precious laptop! Fortunately
Anthony is okay and he can claim most of it back on the insurance so
that’s all good.
Well last time I updated the blog I was
talking about 2 weeks off due to the Form 2 exams, but I didn’t
know what to do… well… I decided that I would help out some
American volunteers staying at Maji Zuwa who are building a new
school block at Khwawa CDSS (where Chloe and Liz teach). I was
accepted by Matt, saying they need all the help they could get so
during the first week of the holiday I went down to the school and
helped build. Now, I have no knowledge about building at all and I
have never laid a single brick before that week but now I am proud to
say I still know very little!! The other volunteers are all
Engineering students and so they had to explain everything to me like
I was an idiot! I learned how to mix sand and cement without a cement
mixer and how to lay bricks and fill. By the end of the week we had
done half of the 4 foot foundations which I was quite pleased with.
The work itself was quite easy, the difficult part was standing
outside in the sun for 9 hours at a time – my scalp got quite
burned after I forgot to suncream it up!! After the week I decided
that my building days were behind me and I should retire from
construction forever and I got invited on a holiday with Chloe and
Liz.
The girls were going to take to ferry
to Ruarwe which is a really remote resort that is a 6 hour hike away
from the closest civilisation. Perfect! I tagged along with them and
we arrived in Ruarwe on the Monday morning. The resort doesn’t have
any electricity or running water, just a heap of books, board games
and a view to die for. I was still a bit miffed as it meant that I
couldn’t see the England game and there was no phone coverage to
receive updates! After 3 games of Monopoly, 4 Scrabble games,
numerous games of Bridge, 2 books and 2 days we decided there wasn’t
that much left to do so we managed to get on the mid-week boat to
Nkhata Bay. I wasn’t feeling very great after my pancakes that
morning and was very sick on the journey (I’ve never had
sea-sickness but I know lake-sickness isn’t very pleasant!). Other
than throwing up, everything else was going well as we were cruising
towards Nkhata Bay, until the captain decided to dock for “a 15
minute break”. After 2 hours of not seeing anyone we got suspicious
and decided to go and look for people, only to find they were all
chatting and had decided to go back to Ruarwe today!! We were stuck
in a very small village with no room to stay, water or food. Luckily
there was a conference going on and we managed to hitch a lift in a
rich mans car all the way to Mzuzu – phewww!
Nkhata Bay was great as usual, we
stayed a place called Butterfly this time which is a tourist place
but also does a lot for the community, its set up a local radio
station for the kids, a music area and much more. The owners are
incredibly friendly and we met another Englishman who we watched the
England v Sweden game with. There were only 4 English people in the
large African bar but we made up for it with noise as England took us
on another rollcoaster ride of emotions!
Also during the 2 weeks off I went and
visited the Bwengu girls for a couple of nights. On the Monday I went
to their school and sat in some of their classes which was very
interesting to compare with my school. I was shown in the Form 3
Maths class and Sarah mentioned that I taught maths at Fulirwa, at
this point the teacher said “Oh excellent, you can teach this class
for me then,” – or words similar. With that I was thrown into an
alien maths class with just a book and a piece of chalk for 40
minutes. I was so proud of the way I dealt with it and I realise that
I would never have been able to do that at the start of the trip. But
now I really enjoyed it, testing the kids knowledge and being able to
manage a class of 40! After school finished the girls took me to one
of their local shops (an average Malawian shops that sells the
basics) and we took over for the afternoon, greeting and serving the
customers. Okay, there was a communication issue and we had to be
helped by the owner almost every time but it was great fun and I
realised how much I miss serving people. The business is quite
incredible, they never look busy and there are so many competitors
around the area but he reckons he would take K15,000 to K30,000 a day
(40 – 75 quid!) which is an amazingly large amount in Malawi.
Obvious this is only his revenue and I am sure his profits are just a
tiny percentage of that figure. In the two hours we were there 14
people came in and asked for a Coke (which was unfortunate as we were
out of Coke and most didn’t like the alternatives.)
So the 2 weeks ended and we went back
to school, if only for a week. The week was full of exams for our
Form 1’s and 3’s which is actually quite a nervous time for me as
I get to see whether my teaching has helped them. The results weren't
too bad in the end but I would have hoped for better with my Form 3
Maths after we did so much extra study. On Friday we were given an
amazing send off from the school with a nice party, speeches and
Coca-Cola of course!!
Now I have just 2 weeks left in Malawi
but I don’t have anymore work to do at the school. I was going to
work on the school building again with the American volunteers but I
have decided to go back to Butterfly in Nkhata Bay and volunteer
there. I am now volunteering there in a nursery school with kids aged
between 2 and 6 which is quite challenging but also so much fun. I am
also going to help out with football training and a video editing
suite that they have there. I really want to do as many different
things here before I leave and I hope that the week there will be
beneficial! Also it means that I can watch all the remaining football
games on the massive screen they have at the Bay – good thinking
eh? I am only going to stay there a week as I want to be back at Maji
Zuwa for the 4th July as there is going to be a huge party
for American Independence Day with about 50 Peace Corps volunteers
invited. I think it will be quite funny to be there with Chloe and
Liz (proud Brits)!
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